Cody Legebokoff, Canada\u2019s youngest serial killer, was convicted in 2014 of the slayings of Loren Donn Leslie, Jill Stacey Stuchenko, Cynthia Frances Maas and Natasha Lynn Montgomery. But he has already been transferred to medium security prison located somewhere in Ontario. This raises a question for Scott: what needs to change about the Canadian corrections system?\n\nGuest: Joe Wamback, founder and Executive Director \xa0of the Canadian Crime Victim Foundation\n\n-\n\nShould Hamilton bid on the 2030 Commonwealth Games? Scott is wary of the idea. But Brian McPhearson, the CEO of Commonwealth Games Canada, joins the podcast to make the case for the games.\n\nGuest: Brian McPhearson, CEO of Commonwealth Games Canada\n\n-\n\nRick Zamperin joins Scott to take on some of the questions raised by this week\u2019s sports news. Are the new football leagues opening in the states, like the AAF and XFL, going to be taking away players who would have been on their way to the CFL? And is this something that the owners of Canadian teams should be concerned about?Meanwhile, over the past few days we have heard several stories of sports fans crossing lines at games, harassing and potentially endangering players. What can be done to curb this beahavior?\n\nGuest: Rick Zamperin, News/Sports director of 900 CHML, host of the 5th Quarter and the 5th Quarter podcast\n\n-\n\nIt\u2019s time for the The Story of the Week. Scott has three strange news items to present, but only one will earn the title. Which story is the best \u2013 a reluctant and literally inhuman mayor, a New York City heating bill that went through the roof, or how the man whose life was saved by his phone?